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Prime Minister Stefan Löfven (S) has a threat of distrust directed at him and it is Jonas Sjöstedt (V) who has his finger on the trigger. If Löfven does not withdraw the investigated proposals for amendments to the Employment Protection Act (read), V will join the right-wing opposition and overthrow the government.
This conflict has left its mark on the latest DN / Ipso voter barometer, according to opinion analyst Nicklas Källebring.
– The battle for them has caught the attention of the Left Party. The party wins voters from the Social Democrats while mobilizing its own voters who have been lying on the couch, says Nicklas Källebring.
V gets 11 percent in measurement compared to 9 last month. It’s the highest roster for the match since March and very close to the best rosters throughout Jonas Sjöstedt’s time as party leader. That time ends on Saturday when Nooshi Dadgostar will be chosen as his successor.
The change for S from last month is small but confirms that the party continues to fall from the heights this spring when the crisis in the crown prompted more voters to support the Prime Minister and his party. In October, 25 percent of voters said they would vote for S.
– There are only a couple of percentage points left until the entire crown effect for Social Democrats is eradicated, says Nicklas Källebring.
The measure deepens also the image of the Liberals as a party incapable of attracting voters. For the fifth consecutive month, L finishes below the Riksdag’s four percent barrier. The party has never been in such a vulnerable position since the DN / Ipso polls began in 1979.
It is also noteworthy that the moderates at 21 percent receive their highest voter support since May 2018. Nicklas Källebring sees a certain flow of voters to M from SD, reaching 20 percent.
For other parts, the changes are also small. The Green Party receives the best grade of the year, which is rounded to 5 percent. After a certain drop for the year, the Center is back to 9 percent, the strongest support since January. Long-term, Christian Democrats are trending slightly negative, at 6 percent in October.
DN’s Ewa Stenbergs on the last battle: Löfven must become a Houdini